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EN
The study contemplates diverse forms of marking the beginning of Lutheran Reformation as they took place during so called Luther’s Decade (2007–2017). It mentions academic conferences, exhibitions and current publications on this theme and considers to what extent they are influenced by interests of the state and by social demand.
EN
The article deals with the „second image“ of Duke John of Görlitz (1370–1396) in Czech and Upper Lusatian historiography of the 16th to 19th century. It analyses the roots of the stereotype linked with this political figure and it comes to the conclusion that the youngest son of Charles IV holds only a marginal place in the historic narrative about Upper Lusatia.
EN
The author presents a sample study of church ceremonies during rulers’ visits to the minor Czech Crown Lands in the 16th century. On the basis of ecclesiastical regulations, he describes the ideal course of a ritual, then with support in the sources, which have been relatively poorly utilised by the scholars, he illustrates the practical side of some specific ceremonies, but also their spiritual content.
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EN
This paper raises the question of the relations between Ferdinand I and the monasteries, which has not been much studied, using Bohemian sources, with the exception of works of the 19th and early 20th century (Klement Borový, Václav Vladivoj Tomek, Zikmund Winter). The author tries as far as possible to give the sources and the extent of the study to describe various types of relationships on the example of convents in Prague, and seeks to take account of the different types of religious institutions such as women’s, contemplative and mendicants’ convents. The differences between them, however, are blurred in this context. He intentionally leaves aside the question of the relations between this ruler and the Jesuit Order.
EN
Based on a passage from Manuscript No. 9350 of the Austrian National Library, which, to the author’s knowledge, has not yet attracted scholarly attention, the paper deals with an interesting description of Upper Lusatia, which probably originated in the second half of the 17th century and offers some remarkable insights into the religious and cultural situation in this region.
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